Market cap is the total market value to buy the whole company. It is equal to the share price times the number of Shares Outstanding (EOP). InterOil Corp's share price for the quarter that ended in Sep. 2016 was $50.92. InterOil Corp's Shares Outstanding (EOP) for the quarter that ended in Sep. 2016 was 50.15 Mil. Therefore, InterOil Corp's market cap for the quarter that ended in Sep. 2016 was $2,553.64 Mil.

Enterprise Value is the theoretical takeover price. It is more comprehensive than market capitalization (market cap), which only includes common equity. Enterprise Value is calculated as the market cap plus debt and minority interest and preferred shares, minus total cash and cash equivalents. InterOil Corp's Enterprise Value for Today is $0.00 Mil.

Historical Data

* All numbers are in millions except for per share data and ratio. All numbers are in their local exchange's currency.

* Premium members only.

InterOil Corp Annual Data

Dec06

Dec07

Dec08

Dec09

Dec10

Dec11

Dec12

Dec13

Dec14

Dec15

Market Cap (M)

2,460.38

2,699.31

2,534.34

2,410.71

1,557.49

InterOil Corp Quarterly Data

Dec11

Mar12

Jun12

Sep12

Dec12

Mar13

Jun13

Sep13

Dec13

Mar14

Jun14

Sep14

Dec14

Mar15

Jun15

Sep15

Dec15

Mar16

Jun16

Sep16

Market Cap (M)

1,670.67

1,557.49

1,581.31

2,245.95

2,553.64

Competitive Comparison

* Competitive companies are chosen from companies within the same industry, with headquarter located in same country, with closest market capitalization; x-axis shows the market cap, and y-axis shows the term value; the bigger the dot, the larger the market cap.

Calculation

Market cap is the short version of market capitalization. It is the total market value to buy the whole company. It is equal to the share price times the number of shares outstanding.

InterOil Corp's Market Cap for the fiscal year that ended in Dec. 2015 is calculated as

* All numbers are in millions except for per share data and ratio. All numbers are in their local exchange's currency.

Explanation

Market cap is not the real price you pay for a company. If you buy the company and become its owner, you become the owner of the cash the company has, and you also assume the companys debt. The real price you pay is the Enterprise Value.

Warren Buffett uses the ratio of total market cap of all public traded companies over GDP to measure if the market is expensive. As of April 2012, the US total market cap is about $14.7 trillion, while the US GDP is about $15 trillion. The market was modestly overvalued.

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